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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2019
Arbitration is frequently the most effective way of resolving international commercial disputes. In a typical dispute the parties will be of different nationality and have different legal and cultural backgrounds. Neither side will be content to allow the dispute to be decided by the national courts of the opposing party. Arbitration offers the parties the opportunity to choose their own arbitrator, the location of the arbitration, the procedures and the law in accordance with which the dispute is to be resolved. It also offers them privacy and in many cases this is likely to be a very important consideration.
1 See also discussion on this topic by Dr. Nael G. Bunni (1989) 1 Arbitration Vol 55, B12.Google Scholar
2 10 William III c. 14.Google Scholar
3 “A Guide to Early Irish Law,” by Fergus Kelly (1988) Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. The Brehon Law is the popular name given to a body of indigenous law which existed in Ireland from Celtic settlement, before Christ, up until the seventeenth century.Google Scholar
4 “Princes and Pirates” by Prof. L.M. Cullen (1983) published by the Dublin Chamber of Commerce.Google Scholar
5 “The Ouzel Galley,” by Dr. George A. Little, President, Old Dublin Society Second (Revised) Edition (1953).Google Scholar